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Zoygarian language: Difference between revisions

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The traditional 30-letter Zoygarian alphabet has eight additions (â, ą, č, ç, ǧ, î, š, ž) to the basic 26-letter Latin alphabet while removing four (j, k, w, x). These four letters are not used in Zoygarian, instead replaced by the closest approximate letter or sound combination available, even in foreign loan words. The traditional set is comprised of 22 consonants and 8 vowels, including one nazal vowel. Zoygarian is part of the Nortuan sub-branch of the Romance languages, a linguistic group that evolved from several dialects of Vulgar Latin. It is most closely related to Rumani, Archravian, and Irzemaian, but differs chiefly in terms of vocabulary. Zoygarian was profoundly influenced by the Slavic languages, which contributed to a large number of loanwords and altered significant portions of Zoygarian vocabulary as well as spelling throughout Zoygaria's history.
The traditional 30-letter Zoygarian alphabet has eight additions (â, ą, č, ç, ǧ, î, š, ž) to the basic 26-letter Latin alphabet while removing four (j, k, w, x). These four letters are not used in Zoygarian, instead replaced by the closest approximate letter or sound combination available, even in foreign loan words. The traditional set is comprised of 22 consonants and 8 vowels, including one nazal vowel. Zoygarian is part of the Nortuan sub-branch of the Romance languages, a linguistic group that evolved from several dialects of Vulgar Latin. It is most closely related to Rumani, Archravian, and Irzemaian, but differs chiefly in terms of vocabulary. Zoygarian was profoundly influenced by the Slavic languages, which contributed to a large number of loanwords and altered significant portions of Zoygarian vocabulary as well as spelling throughout Zoygaria's history.
==History==
==Geographic Distribution==
==Dialects==
==Phonology==
===Vowels===
===Consonants===
==Orthography==
==Grammar==
==Literature==
==Sample Text==

Revision as of 21:53, 2 July 2023

Zoygarian
zoyavsci
Pronunciation[zojavski]
Native toZoygaria
Native speakers
≈ 57.8 million (2014)
Norto-Euronian
Latin (Zoygarian alphabet)
Language codes
ISO 639-1zy
ISO 639-2zoy
ISO 639-3zoy
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For a guide to IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Zoygarian (zoyavsci [zojavski] or lingua zoyavsca [lingwa zojavska]) is a Romance language of the Norto-Euronian language family that evolved from colloquial Latin spoken in Southeast Nortua. It is spoken primarily in Zoygaria and serves as the native language of the Zoygarians. In addition to being the official language of Zoygaria, it is also used by the Zoygarian diaspora.

The traditional 30-letter Zoygarian alphabet has eight additions (â, ą, č, ç, ǧ, î, š, ž) to the basic 26-letter Latin alphabet while removing four (j, k, w, x). These four letters are not used in Zoygarian, instead replaced by the closest approximate letter or sound combination available, even in foreign loan words. The traditional set is comprised of 22 consonants and 8 vowels, including one nazal vowel. Zoygarian is part of the Nortuan sub-branch of the Romance languages, a linguistic group that evolved from several dialects of Vulgar Latin. It is most closely related to Rumani, Archravian, and Irzemaian, but differs chiefly in terms of vocabulary. Zoygarian was profoundly influenced by the Slavic languages, which contributed to a large number of loanwords and altered significant portions of Zoygarian vocabulary as well as spelling throughout Zoygaria's history.

History

Geographic Distribution

Dialects

Phonology

Vowels

Consonants

Orthography

Grammar

Literature

Sample Text